Akash Samaroo
Chief Secretary Farley Augustine says that if re-elected on January 12, his administration will take the issue of Tobago autonomy to an island-wide referendum early in the new year.
Augustine also called on central government to respect and implement the outcome of that vote, warning that failure to do so would lead to Tobagonians mobilising and marching to Port of Spain to demand that the will of the island be honoured.
Speaking in Buccoo on Thursday evening at a Tobago People’s Party political meeting, Augustine said his party has a “blueprint” for Tobago’s development, with a referendum on autonomy as a central element.
“One of the things you will see when our blueprint is launched is that we are going to contain in there proposals for a referendum here in Tobago because we will be asking the central government to authorise through law that we have a referendum so that the entire island can come out and vote and let us settle the issue of our autonomy and what we want in it once and for all. Every adult Tobagonian, one vote on the matter. You vote and whatever you decide that we go with,” Augustine said.
He warned though that if central government does not act on the outcome, further action would follow.
“And if the central government is reluctant to make legal provisions for a assembly, we will hold a non-binding referendum and we will take the data or the results from that referendum and we are going to march forward to Port of Spain and say to Port of Spain this is what the people of Tobago want and we want nothing less than that.”
Augustine said Tobago currently has no authority to create laws governing its maritime space and insisted that any autonomy legislation must address that issue.
“When we talk about our autonomy, we are not accepting any Autonomy Bills, where we can't pass laws for our ocean. That is ours, that don't belong to nobody else but us. That’s we own, that’s not them own.”
He said Tobago should have authority over its waters beyond the median line.
“Let them pass laws for the Gulf of Paria, let them pass laws to the port in Port of Spain, let them pass laws to Toco. But as you cross the median line, let the authority rest with the people of Tobago. That is ours, Tobago is we, and we are not giving it up to anybody whatsoever. That is ours. And so I'm telling you tonight, that this party, under my leadership, will never accept any bill that will not give us authority over our maritime space. We are not accepting it.”
Augustine said he wants the referendum held by at least the middle of the new calendar year.
He added that the two autonomy bills brought by the People’s National Movement administration in 2024 would not have given Tobago any rights or decision-making power in relation to national security or international relations matters.
Augustine did acknowledge however, speaking with Guardian Media, that nothing in the Constitution allows for a referendum to be legally binding.
